Homocerynea

Homocerynea is a monotypic moth genus of the family Erebidae. Its only species, Homocerynea cleoriformis, was found in the US state of Arizona. Both the genus and species were erected by William Barnes and James Halliday McDunnough in 1913.[1]

Homocerynea
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Noctuoidea
Family: Erebidae
Genus: Homocerynea
Barnes & McDunnough, 1913
Species:
H. cleoriformis
Binomial name
Homocerynea cleoriformis
Barnes & McDunnough, 1913

Taxonomy

The genus has previously been classified in the subfamily Phytometrinae within Erebidae or in the subfamily Acontiinae of the family Noctuidae.[2][3]

gollark: It's part of a more complex system, but basically:- Lasers (from Plethora) were on ComputerCraft turtles (robot things), which could fire them in arbitrary directions- The turtles ran a program which connected to a relay-type service I run on my web server, which let them receive commands like "fire at this position" or "fire in this direction"- That relay service passed commands from clients to turtles and the results back to said clients- The Python script connected to the MC server's dynmap (popular service for web maps for Minecraft servers) web API, which, among other things, provides positions of players, and sent commands to fire at the reported position of players.
gollark: Which aren't particularly big, but somewhat useful.
gollark: I have random Python scripts for things I wanted to do at some point which computers could do more easily than I could, like a̦̾̋p͍̫̿p͊̃̇l̜̋̓y̱ͫ̃i̴̔ͫn̲̲͡g͎͏̈́ ̯͋̿r̫͢͡a̲͜͝n̦̽̄d͈̮̤o̻̳̭ṃ̱ͦ ̼͌͠d̵̼̗ǐ̡̕ȧ̰̫ċ̔ͯr̀͠͠ì̄ͥt͓̼͌î͚̘c̞͋̀s͓̬̦ to text, controlling a bunch of laser turrets I had on a Minecraft server over the internet, bulk-converting some music to a different format, and generating beepy noises.
gollark: Putting together simple scripts or whatever to do some random task more easily.
gollark: Random bodging? It's what I do.

References

  1. Savela, Markku. "Homocerynea Barnes & McDunnough, 1913". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  2. Zahiri, Reza; et al. (2011). "Molecular phylogenetics of Erebidae (Lepidoptera, Noctuoidea)". Systematic Entomology. 37: 102–124. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00607.x.
  3. Lafontaine, Donald; Schmidt, Christian (19 March 2010). "Annotated check list of the Noctuoidea (Insecta, Lepidoptera) of North America north of Mexico". ZooKeys. 40: 26. doi:10.3897/zookeys.40.414.


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